UP FRONT JENNIFER TAUB Jewish News Intern F resh with ideas at the begin- ning of his administration, Sam Fisher, the Fresh Air Society's newly-appointed executive director, has a number of goals for the program's future. After completing his post as direc- tor of B'nai B'rith Youth Organization in Israel, July 29, Fisher left Israel to replace Steve Makoff two days later at the Fresh Air Society. Traveling or planning, Fisher is not one to procrastinate. He has already identified areas which re- quire reform and has devised methods for improvement. Low enrollment is his major con- cern and he set a goal to fill the camp to capacity, which would mean adding at least an additional 300 campers. This summer a total of 1;482 campers are being serviced through the pro- grams and Fisher said they can ac- commodate up to 2,000. Developing a new strategy of recruitment should prove the remedy, according to Fisher. He plans to expand the programs to attract kids from across the nation as well as from Israel. Not in- congruous with the society's primary function to support the Detroit Jewish community, he said hosting a diver- sity of children will give the area campers a sense that they are "part of something bigger than the com- munity they belong to." More specifically he visualizes future program offerings directed toward high school graduates and college-age students to include a cross-country U.S. bike trip, an ar- cheological dig in Israel coordinated through the Hebrew University, and a camping program in Israel. He proposes to make the Butzel Center at Camp Maas into a year- round leadership training ground for kids as well as a retreat for similar programs for adult leaders.. Continued on Page 10 Rel igious News Service Sam Fisher Takes Control Of Fresh Air Society Camps PLO chief Yassir Arafat was welcomed to New Delhi last week by India's Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi. Relatives of Refuseniks Devise New Exit Strategy Franklin said her family has tried to bring the Volvovsky's out of the USSR for the past three years. DAVID HOLZEL Staff Writer D etroit relatives of the Volvov- sky refusenik family have devised a new strategy in response to the family's failed at- tempts to leave the Soviet Union. The family was refused an exit visa in April and told not to reapply for several years, according to West Bloomfield cousin Cindy Franklin. She said her efforts will now be concentrated on securing the release of Leonid and Mira Volvovsky's 18-year-old daughter, Kira. Franklin recently sent an invitation for Kira alone to emigrate prompting Kira to apply for an exit visa at the Soviet Of- fice of Visas and Registration (OVIR). Referring to a letter from Kira cir- culated by the Chicago Action for Soviet Jewry, Franklin says the chances for Kira receiving a visa are "slim to none." Despite the unlikelihood of Kira receiving a visa, Franklin said the ef- fort is worthwhile becaue it is "im- portant that the family knows that we have not forgotten them. And it is im- portant that the Russian government knows that we're not going to give up until they start opening those doors." Franklin said that if Kira is allowed to leave, she would stay with her Detroit-area relatives until the time of her parents' release. This is contrary to Kira's wish, expressed in her letter, "to begin to work and study and to live in Israel:' Without her parents, Kira would have no other relatives in Israel, Franklin explained. "She could go to Israel, but at this point she doesn't want to be on her own," Franklin said. ROUND UP 'Laymen Should Meet Pope' New York (JTA) — A prin- cipal Conservative layman has urged that Jewish con- gregational lay leaders be in- vited to join the rabbis scheduled to meet with Pope John Paul II in Rome in ad- vance of the papal trip to the United States in September, including a new uncertain meeting with Jewish leaders in Miami. Franklin Kreutzer of Miami, president of the United Synagogue of America, announced Aug. 7 that he is "dismayed that the five delegates of spiritual dimension suggested for the meeting in Rome are not ful- ly representative of the American Jewish community, of which the overwhelming majority consists of laymen." Wallenberg Is Dead, Says Tass Moscow — Soviet news agency 'Pass claimed Tuesday that a Soviet inquiry into the fate of Raoul Wallenberg determined that he died in 1947. Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat who was credited with saving the lives of 100,000 Hungarian Jews dur- ing World War II was arrested by the Soviets in Budapest in 1945. The Soviets have always claimed that he died in prison in 1947, but reports persist that he is still alive. Israelis Hit In Lebanon Israeli troops since a roadside bombing in May injured four. U.S. Urges 'Scrap Lavi' Tel Aviv (JTA) — Six Israeli soldiers were wounded light- ly Monday when mortar shells were fired at them in the central section of the security zone in South Lebanon. The mortar fire originated outside the securi- ty zone, according to an Israeli Army spokesman. Israeli troops responded with artillery and mortar fire directed at the source of the attack outside the security zone. Israeli gunships fired a missile at a vehicle near Nabatiyeh, 20 miles from the border, according to Israel Radio. The attack claimed the largest number of wounded Russian Jews Reach Israel Washington — The United States urged Israel Tuesday to scrap the Lavi jet fighter. The U.S. has contributed about $1.5 billion toward development of the plane. Tel Aviv (JTA) — Fifty-five new immigrants from the Soviet Union arrived in Israel Monday night, in what was said to have been the largest number in any single flight from Vienna for several years. Among them were pianist Hirsh Feikin and mathemati- cian Pinhas Polansky. Most of them spoke from good to excellent Hebrew, leading some Soviet Jewry ac- tivists to fear that the Soviet authorities were trying to get rid of as many Zionist ac- tivists as possible. U.S. officials contend that the program is too expensive and that Israel should buy its fighters instead of building its own. The issue has sparked a sharp debate in Israel. Op- ponents of the Lavi argue that the airplane will sap Israel of its defense resources. Proponents say that any system which will significant- ly aid Israel's security must be developed at any cost. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5